Examining The Trinity Doctrine:
Part 2
TRY MULTIPLICATION IN THE TRINITY?
GOD
THE FATHER TIMES GOD THE SON TIMES GOD THE HOLY SPIRIT?
“INC
claims that God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit equals three
Gods. Why add, not multiply? Try multiplication: 1 x 1 x 1 = ONE. One divine nature,
three divine persons.”
TRY
MULTIPLICATION IN the Trinity? Multiply? If we multiply One divine nature with
three divine persons, you still have THREE (1 x 3 = 3). Simple mathematics,
isn’t it?
When we
multiply we usually say “1 times 1 times 1”, or “1 by 1 by 1.” When we add, we
usually say “1 plus 1 plus 1”, or “1 and 1 and 1”, or “1, 1 and 1”.
Take note
that the Trinity doctrine does not say “God the Father TIMES God the Son TIMES
God the Holy Spirit.” Nor does it say
“God the Father BY God the Son BY God the Holy Spirit.” The Catholic
expression of the Trinity doctrine in Latin is “Pater et Filius et Spiritus Sanctus” or in English “The Father and
the Son and the Holy Spirit.”
Clearly then,
the Trinity is addition, not multiplication. And being addition, 1 plus 1 plus
1 equals three. To make it 1 plus 1 plus 1 equals 1 reduces it to an absurdity
for it does not differ from “two and two equal five” which is an absurdity and
which God cannot do, according to a Jesuit priest John Walsh in his book This is Catholicism, footnote on page
25:
“God, of course, cannot perform an absurdity, a contradiction in
terms. He canoont, for instance, make two and two equal five.” (Walsh, John. This is Catholicism. New York: Image
Book, 1959, p. 25)
If two and two
equal five is an absurdity, says Walsh, thus one plus one plus one equal one is
no better than this. If God cannot perform an absurdity, according to this
Catholic priest, then God would never make up an absurdity such as the
so-called Trinity.
Trinity is indeed an absurdity!
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These Trinitarian beliefs are not logical, even in math! There is only one God. No one else.
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